Civil and Human Rights

Supreme Court Rules Property Rights Not Violated by State’s Beach Upgrades

 

The Supreme Court today ruled that the state of Florida did not have to compensate several beachfront property owners when a beach renourishment project changed the owners’ property lines.

 

The case came to the court when Walton County , Florida officials, citing dangerous beach erosion along the Gulf of Mexico, stepped in and added sand along a 6.9 mile stretch in 2003, using taxpayer money.

 

Florida’s Beach and Shore Preservation Act authorizes publicly funded beach restoration to protect critically eroded beaches, and the county’s multimillion dollar project added new sand, reshaping dunes and in some areas substantially increasing the size of the beach.

 

But the improvements, according to Florida law, also made that “new” strip of beach public property, infuriating residents like Nancy and Slade Lindsay, who have a home overlooking the gulf in the town of Destin. They said the action amounted to the state unlawfully taking ownership of their private beachfront property.

 

“They are literally taking our property,” Slade Lindsay said. “Changing our deeds, changing our property boundaries, no compensation and no tax breaks.”

 

The Lindsays and four other residents along the sandy stretch filed a lawsuit to challenge Florida’s actions. The state’s highest court ruled in favor of the Florida government.

 

The homeowners then brought their case to the U.S. Supreme Court, arguing that the Florida Supreme Court decision had unconstitutionally deprived them of their property.

 

In legalese, the homeowners said that the state court decision constituted a “judicial taking” of their property, which the U.S. Constitution prohibits.

 

Today, the court ruled unanimously against the property owners in the case, finding that the state had not improperly confiscated property that would lead to a judicial taking.

 

“The court’s ruling today supports Florida’s efforts to restore eroded beaches and preserves the ability of state and local governments to respond to changing environmental conditions,” said Doug Kendall of the Constitutional Accountability Center. “As the oil spill now ravaging our nation’s coastlines vividly demonstrates, it is crucially important that the government have the authority to step in to protect our beaches and coastal communities.”

 

However, some of the justices left open the possibility that in other cases, with different facts, they might rule the state was guilty of a “judicial taking.”

 

“The four conservative justices recognized that the judicial branch of government is not insulated from the protections afforded to private property owners by the U.S. Constitution,” said Richard Brightman, an attorney for the homeowners.

 

“We are disappointed by the ruling but it leaves open the possibility of other judicial takings cases in the future,” he said.

 

Justice John Paul Stevens took no part in the decision, possibly because he owns beachfront property in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

 

 

Read the original article here.

 

More from Civil and Human Rights

Civil and Human Rights
December 5, 2024

Podcast (We the People): Can Tennessee Ban Medical Transitions for Transgender Minors?

National Constitution Center
A Tennessee law prohibits transgender minors from receiving gender transition surgery and hormone therapy. Professor Kurt...
Civil and Human Rights
December 4, 2024

RELEASE: Supreme Court Should Not Turn Equal Protection Clause on its Head in Case about Medical Care for Transgender Adolescents

WASHINGTON, DC – Following oral argument at the Supreme Court this morning in United States...
Civil and Human Rights
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

Payan v. Los Angeles Community College District

In Payan v. Los Angeles Community College District, the Ninth Circuit is considering whether lost educational opportunities are compensable under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act. 
Civil and Human Rights
U.S. Supreme Court

Stanley v. City of Sanford

In Stanley v. City of Sanford, the Supreme Court is considering whether the Americans with Disabilities Act protects against disability discrimination with respect to retirement benefits distributed after employment. 
Civil and Human Rights
U.S. Supreme Court

United States v. Skrmetti

In United States v. Skrmetti, the Supreme Court is considering whether Tennessee’s ban on providing gender-affirming medical care to transgender adolescents violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Civil and Human Rights
July 31, 2024

Supreme Court Allows Cities to Punish Homelessness

The Regulatory Review
At the end of its 2023-24 term, the U.S. Supreme Court issued several divided decisions...
By: Brian R. Frazelle